
Barrio Libre: Criminalizing States and Delinquent Refusals of the New Frontier
Gilberto Rosas
Rosas argues that although these youths participate in the victimization of others, they should not be demonized. They are complexly and adversely situated. The effects of NAFTA have forced many of them, as well as other Mexicans, to migrate to Nogales. Moving fluidly with the youths through the spaces that they inhabit and control, he shows how the militarization of the border actually destabilized the region and led Barrio Libre to turn to increasingly violent activities, including drug trafficking. By focusing on these youths and their delinquency, Rosas demonstrates how capitalism and criminality shape perceptions and experiences of race, sovereignty, and resistance along the US-Mexico border.
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About Gilberto Rosas
Reviews for Barrio Libre: Criminalizing States and Delinquent Refusals of the New Frontier
Leigh Binford
Social Forces
“This book would be a great choice for a graduate seminar on violence, conflict, immigration, human rights, the U.S.-Mexico border, or political geography, as it is rich with theoretical interest and ripe for challenging discussion. . . . Barrio Libre is an excellent book that shines a bright light through the dark passageways running under the Mexico-U.S. border and, like it or not, shows us what is there.”
Margaret Wilder
Journal of Latin American Geography
“The strength of [Rosas's] work is in his ability to analyze with authority and depth both sides of the border politic that historically gave birth to the intense violence that exists today. He deftly articulates the dehumanizing practices of both Mexican and U.S. economies and powers that practice neoliberalism, which has led to the new low-intensity warfare and militarized policing prevalent at this cross-border region.”
Cynthia Bejarano
The Americas
“Gilberto Rosas’ Barrio Libre offers its readers a thoughtful and complex (re)theorizing of the Mexico/US border, the various subjects that inhabit it, and the violence that has become so much a part of securing the border and the nations it divides.”
Cristina Jo Pérez
Powerlines
“The concise book uses well-chosen vignettes to show the reader ethnographically and theoretically what the point of view of the youth in Barrio Libre can teach scholars about contemporary racial and national politics with regard to migration and the construction of national security threats in Mexico and the United States.”
Connie McGuire
PoLAR
"Scholars from a range of disciplines will find several valuable insights in this text. Latin Americanists will appreciate the rich and meaningful references to the borderlands... Scholars working on new forms of humanism will be drawn to Rosas’ ability to draw out the textures of fragile human forms of life by means of an ethnographic attention to imminent death, framed complimentary to other ideas of slow death and cruel optimism."
Emily A. Lynch
Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology